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Credit Risk
A01=Darrell Duffie
A01=Kenneth J. Singleton
Approximation
Asset
Author_Darrell Duffie
Author_Kenneth J. Singleton
Basis Point
Bond (finance)
Bond valuation
Bond Yield
Calculation
Call option
Capital requirement
Cash flow
Category=KFFL
Category=KJMD
Collateralized debt obligation
Conditional probability distribution
Counterparty
Coupon
Coupon (bond)
Credit (finance)
Credit derivative
Credit event
Credit rating
Credit risk
Credit spread (options)
Currency
Debt
Default Rate
Discounts and allowances
Diversification (finance)
Economics
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Event of default
Financial institution
Forward rate
Government bond
Hedge (finance)
High-yield debt
Interest rate
Interest rate swap
Investment
Investor
Issuer
Lehman Brothers
Leverage (finance)
Liability (financial accounting)
Libor
Likelihood function
Long run and short run
Market liquidity
Market price
Market value
Markov chain
Parameter
Payment
Present value
Pricing
Probability
Probability distribution
Probability of default
Risk management
Risk premium
Risk-neutral measure
Securitization
Short rate
Special case
Stochastic volatility
Swap (finance)
Swap rate
Time horizon
Valuation (finance)
Value (economics)
Yield curve
Yield spread
Zero-coupon bond
Product details
- ISBN 9780691090467
- Weight: 482g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 26 Jan 2003
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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In this book, two of America's leading economists provide the first integrated treatment of the conceptual, practical, and empirical foundations for credit risk pricing and risk measurement. Masterfully applying theory to practice, Darrell Duffie and Kenneth Singleton model credit risk for the purpose of measuring portfolio risk and pricing defaultable bonds, credit derivatives, and other securities exposed to credit risk. The methodological rigor, scope, and sophistication of their state-of-the-art account is unparalleled, and its singularly in-depth treatment of pricing and credit derivatives further illuminates a problem that has drawn much attention in an era when financial institutions the world over are revising their credit management strategies. Duffie and Singleton offer critical assessments of alternative approaches to credit-risk modeling, while highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of current practice. Their approach blends in-depth discussions of the conceptual foundations of modeling with extensive analyses of the empirical properties of such credit-related time series as default probabilities, recoveries, ratings transitions, and yield spreads.
Both the "structura" and "reduced-form" approaches to pricing defaultable securities are presented, and their comparative fits to historical data are assessed. The authors also provide a comprehensive treatment of the pricing of credit derivatives, including credit swaps, collateralized debt obligations, credit guarantees, lines of credit, and spread options. Not least, they describe certain enhancements to current pricing and management practices that, they argue, will better position financial institutions for future changes in the financial markets. Credit Risk is an indispensable resource for risk managers, traders or regulators dealing with financial products with a significant credit risk component, as well as for academic researchers and students.
Darrell Duffie is the James Irvin Miller Professor of Finance at the Graduate School of Business, Stanford University. His books include "Dynamic Asset Pricing Theory" (Princeton) and "Futures Markets" (Prentice-Hall). Kenneth J. Singleton is the C.O.G. Miller Distinguished Professor of Finance at the Graduate School of Business, Stanford University. He is the author of numerous articles in professional journals and an editor of the "Review of Financial Studies".
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